Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Let's Talk about This "Red Line"

I submitted this letter to the editor of the Brookings Register today (minus the AP photo, provided by the Local Committee of Arbeen.)

The situation in Syria is deeply distressing. Nobody wants to see nearly 1,500 civilians lying dead, 400 children among them, the victims of chemical weapons. But anybody can see that a U.S. retaliatory strike against
the Assad regime for apparently gassing its own citizens may well solve nothing, complicate much, and doom many in the Middle East, if not beyond.

We Americans have been told that with the use of chemical weapons “the red line has been crossed.” So now we must act. With force. Even if we must act alone.

Let’s talk a bit about this “red line,” shall we? Prohibitions against chemical warfare, such as the Geneva Protocol signed in 1925, grew largely out of the world’s revulsion at seeing a million people die of gassing during World War I. A million dead—horrific. But wasn’t the 28 million dead due to conventional weapons in that war exceedingly more horrific? Both conventional weapons and chemical weapons are “weapons of mass destruction.”

So perhaps the red line concerns not the quantity of the dead, but the quality of their dying. Sarin gas, for instance—within minutes its victims convulse and seize, struggle to breathe, vomit, lose control of their bowels…. Terrible. But is dying by gas really worse than dying from a bullet in the gut, or a traumatic brain injury, or radiation poisoning? Is there really a good way, as opposed to a bad way, to suffer and die in a war? Ask those living and dying in war zones to split such hairs.

Perhaps then the red line concerns the identity of the victims. The conventions of modern warfare justly prohibit the targeting of civilians. Those who were gassed in Syria were apparently innocents, not soldiers or rebels—their murder was criminal, barbaric. But most of the 100,000 Syrians killed by conventional weapons in that bloody civil war have also been innocents. Their slaughter is just as heinous. In modern warfare the distinction between combatant and civilian seems to matter little, if at all.

This red line is proving troublesome, isn’t it? Its significance is hard to analyze. But its cryptic quality may itself be a clue to its nature. It may be that crossing this red line is “taboo” because it leads
us into the mysterious realm of our most primal fears. As a species we typically
dread falling victim to the unknown, the unseen, the uncontrollable, the
unstoppable. We fear being at the mercy of blood-thirsty gods who suddenly (and
invisibly) come among us, indiscriminately killing, like poison gas. The red
line exists to keep us a safe distance from them. When that line is
transgressed, no words can save us, or express our terror.

President Obama called the use of chemical weapons “an
assault on our human dignity.” I would submit that all warfare, even when undertaken in self-defense, is such an
assault. There is no warfare that is not terrible. Every war, every act of
violence, is a crossing of the red line into the realm of our worst fears. Ask
those suffering in Syria if it is not so.

Therefore the question of whether our nation will retaliate
militarily against the Assad regime for using chemical weapons must be debated with
utmost seriousness. And the possibility of not
retaliating must be a very real option on the table.

To not retaliate,
to not attack, doesn’t mean to do
nothing in the face of evil. It means to do better than what’s been done. We’re
capable of “better.”